Royal Icing - 1 1/2 Cups (for handmixer)

Cuisinart original

This icing is great for decorating sugar cookies or cakes. You can use food coloring to color it or extracts to flavor it.

Yields

Makes about 1½ cups

Ingredients

4            cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted

1            large egg white, slightly beaten

2            tablespoons whole milk

1            teaspoon fresh lemon juice


Nutritional information

Nutritional information per serving (1 teaspoon): Calories 22 (1% from fat) • carb. 6g • pro. 0g • fat 0g • sat. fat 0g • chol. 0mg • sod. 1mg • calc. 1mg • fiber 0g

Instructions

Put the sugar into a large mixing bowl. Using a Cuisinart® Hand Mixer fitted with the chef’s whisk, mix on speed. With the mixer running, slowly add the egg white. Once the egg white is completely incorporated, slowly add the milk and lemon juice. Continue to mix on speed 1, gradually increasing to speed 3 until the mixture has formed soft peaks. Fit the Cuisinart® Electric Cookie Press with the pastry tip assembly, using desired tip as instructed on page 5. Load the icing to the MAX fill line. Tips: Royal icing is best used immediately. If you are not using right away, cover the bowl with a damp cloth so the icing does not harden after step 2. If using coloring or flavoring extract for the icing, add it with the milk and lemon juice in step 2. Please refer to piping tips below for best results*. * The consistency of what you are to pipe is very important. In most cases, frostings will have to be thicker than normal in order to achieve best results. If the frosting, especially for decorating, is too thin, it will not hold its shape. You will notice that most frostings, decorating or not, will need to be thicker than normal, such as Royal Icing. We recommend practicing what you are to pipe before you go to the final product. There is a learning curve to getting it just right. Whether you are filling pâte à choux or piping a decoration on a cake, it is advised to pulse the On/Off button as opposed to holding it down continuously. This allows for more control on the amount of filling or frosting that will be used at one time. When piping on a cookie or a cake, for decorating, quickly pulse once and then gauge your work from there. It is better to go under in time than over. There will always be more frosting/filling than expected pressed out of the tip, so go slowly. As when using a traditional pastry bag for decorating, you want to guide the frosting as if it were a ribbon, as opposed to forcing it in place. When filling, be it cream puffs or deviled eggs, pipe desired amount and then pause between each, making sure all of the filling is removed from the tip before moving on to the next one. Following are the uses we suggest. #1 Round Tip: Use to make cream puffs or gougères. #2 Ribbon/Rose: Can also be used to make flowers on cakes #3 3-Prong Star: Use to make stars for decorating cakes/cupcakes #4 Ridged Border: Makes an elegant ridged border #5 Ribbed/Basket Weave: An easy way to make a beautiful basket weave on cakes. #6 Classic Star Tip: Use for decorating cakes and filling cream puffs #7 Simple Border: Great for piping borders on cakes #8 3-Prong Border: Beautiful when used to pipe cream or meringues on tarts/pies.